God has revealed that He is all-good, all-just and never evil. I’m saying how that is the case, I don’t think we can just do some math, use our reason, and figure it out.
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We cannot know the reasoning and will of God except only when he tells us
I appreciate the clarification! I think that the fundamental disagreement between us lies in our approaches. You seem to be basing most, if not all, of your epistemic chips in God as Divinely Revealed and deducing from that how God is; whereas, I base most, if not all, of my epistemic chips in natural theology and deduce how God is from that.
This is a good example, as you think God is all-good and all-just
only because God has revealed this to us; whereas I think we know God is all-good and all-just because we can reason about His nature from His effects.
Of course, if you believe that God exists solely because of the historical accounts in that the verses in the OP should be read in a manner where God did do those things, then I understand how you would arrive at the conclusion that God can do the same thing that we have done and it wouldn’t be immoral. The problem lies in the fact that we can know, through natural theology, that God cannot do those things because they violate His very nature.
If a man kills another person can you tell if he is an evil murderer without knowing his heart, his reasoning and his intention?
I think you are conflating absolute certainty with sufficient evidence.
This is why Jesus tells us not to judge our brothers and to leave justice to God.
I don’t believe Jesus teaches that we should never judge each other; and based off of your example, then, wouldn’t you need to hold that Jesus is teaching that you shouldn’t convict murderers on earth but rather leave it to God?
Are there any deaths of anyone that are not God’s plan? God sent Adam and Eve out to die and all of their offspring, all of us unable since the moment of conception to return to eternal life. Why pick certain stories from the OT to chastise God’s actions? None of us are Adam or Eve, but we have all been punished for original sin? Aren’t we innocent of the crimes that led us to know death?
I am not making a problem of evil argument, in the sense that that phrase refers to, because I am noting that God cannot contradict His own nature; and it contradicts His nature to commit murder.
The problem of evil, IMHO, as typically understood, isn’t that problematic to me. God
allows evil for the sake of higher goods; but, crucially, He does not
partake in evil. So if the OP is right, then God cannot do such acts because it would be evil for Him to do so.
God is not the direct agent of injustice, because there are no innocents as each of us relates to God (except where God makes us innocent)
Yes, but I would also argue that people with ‘original sin’ seem to be ‘innocent’ in the stereotypical sense we are discussing. This gets at another example to the point of the OP: is it morally permissible for God to do generational punishing for sins those generations did not commit but
not permissible for North Korea to do?
I think you would say that God has a sovereign standing to do it and this is the differentiating factor; but, then, you are committed to saying generational punishment, like North Korea’s, is not always morally impermissible or unjust. That’s a bullet I am not readily receptive to biting (:
The best way to find these answers is to love God, to read of his mercy and goodness and know that the all-powerful creator loves you, Bob, in particular, so much so that he would die for you, and did so on a cross - that is the person we are here asking to explain His deeds. And he will explain them to you because he loves you.
I have deep sympathy for Christ; but the Bible has to make sense to me to accept him as the Son of God because Christ clearly relates Himself to the Old Testament God as if He is the Word of that God in flesh. So if the OT God is doing things that God cannot do because it would contradict His nature and Jesus is relating himself to that God, then Jesus cannot be the Son of God.
But I don’t think our human calculations will adequately sort out the flood, the killing of the first born in Egypt, etc, etc.
It just all seems blatantly wrong, by objective standards, and to dismiss it as a question we can ask God later seems problematic to me: it questions the integrity of the Bible itself, so I would argue we need to hash it out. I think most Christians throughout history would agree since there seem to be a great body of literature on it.
One of my favorite passages is John 15:15 “No longer do I call you slaves, for the slave does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, because all things that I have heard from My Father I have made known to you.”
What do you think about Divine Hiddenness? Why did Jesus, if he is the Son of God, always speak cryptically, omit revealing most of ethics, came in an ancient time knowing we have technology that would greatly help solidify/safeguard the evidence of his existence as God, and avoid revealing himself to everyone?
I know that’s a separate topic, but Divine Hiddenness is another interesting topic.